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The AlpineInker

The AlpineInker

Ken Hinckley's blog exploring the savage frontiers of pen, touch, and mobile devices

The official blog of the InkSeine project at Microsoft Research

Portrait Inking on the OQO Model 02

The OQO Model 02 is almost the same size as my Moleskine Pocket Sketchbook. I suspect this is no accident. To illustrate the point, I scanned them side-by-side. The OQO is slightly narrower, which is necessary to make it fit in my shirt pocket given its 1" girth. By the way, don't let this scan fool you - the screen on the OQO is gorgeous. It's just really hard to scan properly. The other photos below give a better sense of what the screen really looks like.

I set up a custom cover page for my OQO in InkSeine to make it feel just like a new moley fresh out of the shrink wrap. Now I feel like writing important stuff in here.

I also scanned my pocket Moleskine to use for the inside pages. I love having this page style on the OQO - it just seems right.

I prefer inking on the OQO Model 02 in the portrait orientation. I can grip the device more comfortably in this orientation, and there is more room to plant my hand on the screen. This also keeps the touch-scrollers out from underneath my hand. I've experimented some with using the "secondary portrait" orientation, to flip those touch scrollers over to my left hand. That feels great, but since the keyboard rotate function only flips between the primary landscape and primary portrait orientations, it's inconvenient to go to the options panel and hunt for the command to flip to the secondary portrait orientation.

There's one other tip I have for working in the portrait orientation on the OQO's small screen. I was thinking about why it seemed easier to draw in my pocket Moleskine, even though it has nearly identical dimensions as the OQO. It's not so much the small screen size of the OQO, as it is the thickness.

So I slide out the keyboard, and I rest the meat of my palm on that. This feels more like resting my hand on the desk while I draw in my (thinner) pocket Moleskine. The OQO keyboard keys are fairly stiff so I never trigger them by accident while I'm doing this. Typically I do this while holding the OQO in my left hand; the photo below shows me doing this on the desk because I was out of hands to hold the camera, and no tripod was handy :-)

   

The keyboard is also convenient for hitting the Enter key, modifier keys, or the special OQO hardware hotkeys (such as the screen rotation, brighteness, and keyboard backlight) when the occasion demands.

That closes the book on this post. I'm sure I'll have more thoughts and ideas about using the OQO as I continue to work with it.

 

Related Posts:

My very first impression of the OQO Model 02

Make a faux-OQO to see if the size is right for you

Comments

 

GottaBeMobile said:

April 21, 2008 5:43 PM
 

TrackBack said:

April 23, 2008 1:50 AM
 

TrackBack said:

April 23, 2008 4:28 PM
 

wherman said:

I just got my OQO as well and found these apps shortly after finding yours

Touch Scroller Auto-Disable when pen is near screen:

www.oqotalk.com/.../topic,2213.0.html

Auto-Screen Rotate based on shock sensor (ala-iphone):

www.oqotalk.com/.../topic,770.0.html

With both those all the writing apps really become quite easy to use in any orientation.

-Bill

April 28, 2008 8:06 PM
 

Ken Hinckley said:

Thanks for the tips and posting the links, Bill! I've been using Kenricks' auto-rotate utlity for a few days now and it's wonderful. I also have his touch scroller utlity and just have not had a chance to install it yet. I'm actually kind of planning a blog post around these at some point - I've done some related research in the past.

I definitely consider the auto-rotate utility a must have on the OQO now, and I expect the same will be true of the touch scroller utility.

I expect I'm going to stick with Portrait orientation for my sketching and note-taking - the OQO just really feels right to me that way. I find it a little awkward to write on in Landscape.

April 29, 2008 1:33 AM
 

marcelor said:

Looking forward to hear more tips from folks on the OQO as I'm about to buy one. Ken, are you running Vista or XP TabletPC on the OQO?

April 29, 2008 11:59 AM
 

Ken Hinckley said:

Vista Business for me, primarily for three reasons:

1. Desktop Search. It's awesome to have this integrated with the OS. InkSeine can basically be thought of as a glorified UI to Desktop Search for the pen. Yeah, you can install Windows Desktop Search on XP, but it's a little bit onerous of an install and I find that it has a few quirks here and there that have largely been resolved with Vista's integrated search. Just make sure you tell Vista to index your whole hard disk (possibly with the exception of the Program Files directory) so you can find all your stuff. It only indexes My Documents by default.

2. Vista's handwriting recognition is incredible! It learns from your handwriting as you go, plus it picks up out-of-vocabulary words (like "OQO" !!!) from the search index of your email. (And it makes it convenient to add words when you do handwriting corrections too). A scenario that this really helps with in InkSeine is searching from my handwritten notes of people's names, which XP consistently bungles even after using it for years, but Vista recognizes amazingly well after a short ramp-up time.

3. Flicks. See my other posts on using InkSeine's Tool Ring as a flick pad. I have another post that I will do soon on my new set of flicks that I'm using on the OQO.

I know Vista takes a lot of criticism, but I find my OQO works just great with it. I still have Windows XP Tablet PC edition on several of my tablets (for testing, and because some are older devices that can barely run XP, never mind Vista). But it's painful to go back to XP on my tablets, especially because of the handwriting issue.

I am finding a few little quirks/bugs and things that could be improved about InkSeine on the OQO, but it works pretty well, particularly if you pick up our new release (version 1.1.425.0) which has some performance improvements and speeds the startup and shutdown time as well.

April 29, 2008 1:52 PM